Conrad L. Kellenberg has been a member of the faculty of the Notre Dame Law School since 1955, becoming a full professor in 1967, and serving as director of the Neighborhood Legal Services Program from 1965 through 1967. His teaching experience includes visiting professorships at the University of East Africa (1964-65) and the University of London (1968-70). He earned his A.B. from St. John’s University in 1949 and his J.D. from Columbia University in 1952; he also studied as a graduate fellow at Yale University (1958-59). Admitted to the New York Bar in 1952, Professor Kellenberg served as a legal officer in the U.S. Air Force and engaged in private law practice in New York City from 1953 to 1955.
Professor Kellenberg taught in the areas of environmental, energy, minerals, water, agricultural, land-use, public-lands, and housing and community development law. He has been a member of the International Third World Legal Studies Association since 1965.

<b>Monographs</b>
The Establishment of a University-Sponsored Neighborhood Legal Office Program in a Medium-Sized City (1967).
Discrimination in the Sale, Rental and Financing of Private Housing in South Bend and Mishawaka (1963).

Professor Emeritus of Law

<a href="mailto:rward@nd.edu">Rebecca Ward</a>

D.

Spalding

Andrew

1100 Eck Hall of Law

574.631.6627

574.631.4197

D.A.Spalding.4@nd.edu

Faculty

Adjunct

LAW70911, Law of Medical Malpractice

Adjunct Faculty

<a href="mailto:rward@nd.edu">Rebecca Ward</a>

Dan

Cory

Faculty

Adjunct

Adjunct Faculty

Dan

Manier

3315 Biolchini Hall

574.631.3939

manier@nd.edu

Staff

Library Information Technology

Director of Law School Technology

Daniel

Kelly

B.

3166 Eck Hall of Law

574.631.7690

574.631.0653

daniel.kelly@nd.edu

http://ssrn.com/author=496939

http://www.nd.edu/~ndlaw/faculty/cv/kelly_cv.pdf

Faculty

Tenured and Tenure-Track

Law & Economics

Property Law

Trusts & Estates

Dan Kelly teaches and writes in the areas of property law and wills, trusts, and estates.
Professor Kelly’s research on eminent domain has appeared in the <i><a href="http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/research/cornell-law-review/upload/Kelly-final.pdf">Cornell Law Review</a></i>, <i><a href="http://www.harvardlawreview.org/media/pdf/kelly.pdf">Harvard Law Review Forum</a></i>, <i><a href="http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/S/bo6839355.html">Supreme Court Economic Review</a></i>, and <i><a href="http://www.e-elgar.co.uk/bookentry_main.lasso?id=13202&amp;breadcrumlink=law.lasso&amp;breadcrum=Law&amp;sub_values=Law%20and%20Economics&amp;site_Bus_Man=&amp;site_dev=&amp;site_eco=&amp;site_env_eco=&amp;site_inn_tech=&amp;site_int_pol=&amp;site_law=Yes&amp;site_pub_soc">Research Handbook on the Economic Analysis of Property Law</a></i>. He has presented two other property articles at the Harvard/Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum: “Strategic Spillovers,” subsequently published in the <i><a href="http://columbialawreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/111-8_Kelly.pdf">Columbia Law Review</a></i>, and “The Right to Include,” published in the <a href="http://www.law.emory.edu/fileadmin/journals/elj/63/63.4/Kelly.pdf">Emory Law Journal</a>. In addition, he has written several articles on wills and trusts, including <a href="http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2095537">"Toward Economic Analysis of the Uniform Probate Code"</a> and <a href="http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1990802">"Restricting Testamentary Freedom: Ex Ante Versus Ex Post Justifications"</a>. Currently, he is working on a paper on the assembly of land by real estate developers and universities and a book chapter on the division of possessory rights (forthcoming in <i>The Law and Economics of Possession</i>, Cambridge University Press).
Professor Kelly is the co-director and co-founder (with Margaret Brinig) of the <a href="http://law.nd.edu/program-on-law-and-economics/">Notre Dame Law and Economics Program</a>. Established in 2010, the Program features an interdisciplinary <a href="http://law.nd.edu/program-on-law-and-economics/law-economics-workshop/">seminar</a> and <a href="http://law.nd.edu/program-on-law-and-economics/symposium/">symposium</a> in which students and faculty explore current research in the economic analysis of law. He also has served as a referee for the <i>American Law and Economics Review</i>, European Association of Law and Economics, <i>Harvard Law Review, Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, Journal of Legal Analysis, University of Chicago Law Review,</i> University of Chicago Press, <i>Yale Law Journal</i>, and <i>Yale University Press</i>.
Before joining the law school faculty, Kelly was a clerk on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, an attorney at Cravath, Swaine &amp; Moore, and a research fellow at Yale and Harvard Law School. He is a graduate of Harvard Law School and the University of Notre Dame.

Daniel Philpott, Ph.D. Harvard, 1996, pursues interests in international relations, political philosophy, and peace studies. His research focuses on reconciliation in politics. His most recent book is <a href="http://kroc.nd.edu/research/books/religion-conflict-peacebuilding/1021">Just and Unjust Peace: An Ethic of Political Reconciliation</a> (Oxford University Press, 2012), which derives from theological and philosophical roots an ethic of reconciliation that offers concrete guidelines to political orders facing pasts of authoritarianism, civil war, and genocide. On the same topic, Philpott has edited <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Politics-Past-Evil-Reconciliation-Transitional/dp/0268038902/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1243347989&amp;sr=1-1">The Politics of Past Evil: Religion, Reconciliation, and Transitional Justice</a> (Notre Dame, 2006). Philpott also directs a <a href="http://kroc.nd.edu/research/religion-conflict-peacebuilding/religion-reconciliation">research program on religion and reconciliation</a> at the Kroc Institute.
Philpott also specializes in religion and global politics. With Timothy Samuel Shah and Monica Duffy Toft, he co-wrote God’s Century: Resurgent Religion and Global Politics (W.W. Norton, 2011), which documents a resurgence of religion in global politics over the past generation and seeks to explain why religious actors take on diverse political pursuits including democratization, peace, reconciliation, civil war, and terrorism. With Gerard F. Powers, he also edited Strategies of Peace (Oxford University Press), a collection of essays on <a href="http://kroc.nd.edu/aboutus/peacestudies/strategic-peacebuilding">strategic peacebuilding</a> authored primarily by Kroc Institute faculty.
By conducting work in faith-based reconciliation around the globe, Philpott pursues an activist dimension of his scholarly interests. Between 2000 and 2006, he traveled regularly to Kashmir as a senior associate of the International Center for Religion and Diplomacy. He now trains political and religious leaders in reconciliation in Burundi and the broader Great Lakes region of Africa under the auspices of the Catholic Peacebuilding Network.
Philpott’s first book, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Revolutions-Sovereignty-Shaped-International-Relations/dp/0691057478/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1243347673&amp;sr=1-1">Revolutions in Sovereignty: How Ideas Shaped Modern International Relations</a> (Princeton University Press, 2001), is a historical account of how ideas about justice and legitimate authority fashioned the global sovereign states system. Reflecting his interests in political theory, ethics, and international relations, he also has written about the morality of self-determination, religious freedom and American foreign policy, transitional justice, and Catholicism and global politics.
Philpott has published articles in <i>The American Political Science Review, World Politics, Ethics, The Journal of Democracy, the National Interest, America, First Things, Political Studies, The Journal of International Affairs, The Review of Faith and International Affairs, Security Studies,</i> and the <i>Annual Review of Political Science</i>. He has held fellowships at Harvard University, Princeton University, the University of Virginia, the Erasmus Institute at Notre Dame, the Hertie School of Governance, and the Wissenschaftzentrum Berlin, with the latter two on a fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.

Center for Civil and Human Rights

/assets/127212/fullsize/philpott_photo.jpg

Director, Center for Civil and Human Rights <br/>Concurrent Professor of Law

Dave

Thornton

2347 Biolchini Hall

574.631.5991

David.Thornton.33@nd.edu

Staff

Library

Collection Management Assistant

David

Link

574.631.6890

574.631.3980

David.T.Link.1@nd.edu

Faculty

Emeriti

Dean David T. Link, a member of the Notre Dame Law School faculty since 1970 and dean from 1975 to 1999, enjoyed the longest tenure among American law-school deans until his promotion to dean emeritus. He earned his B.S. magna cum laude and his J.D. from Notre Dame in 1958 and 1961, respectively. While in law school, he belonged to the staff of the law review, Notre Dame Lawyer, and served as chairman of the annual moot-court competition. Admitted to the bars of Ohio, Illinois and Indiana, as well as before the United States Supreme Court, Dean Link has practiced law with the U.S. Treasury Department (1961-66) and with the Chicago law firm of Winston & Strawn (1966-70).
Dean Link has spoken and written extensively on the topic of professional responsibility for attorneys, and teaches ethics to all first-year law students. He participates in a number of committees designed to encourage a renewed sense of professionalism among attorneys including the ABA Section on Legal Education, Committee on Professionalism (member 1993-97), the Indiana State Ethics Commission (chair 1988-90) and the Society for Values in Higher Education (member since 1980). He is also a noted author in the field of federal taxation.
He has a strong interest in world law and human rights. He held the position as interim director of the University’s Center for Civil and Human Rights, and chaired the World Law Institute, a not-for-profit organization established to sponsor educational programs in fields of law relating to the global economy, world organizations and the emerging world common law.
He actively participates in a number of University committees including the Academic Council, the Provost’s Advisory Committee, and the Athletic-Affairs, Academic Affairs and Faculty Affairs Committees of the Board of Trustees. His community involvement includes a number of organizations that provide housing including Habitat for Humanity and the Christmas-in-April program, the South Bend Center for the Homeless (of which he is a co-founder), the Friends of the Homeless Advisory Council (chair since 1995) and There Are Children Here (board member since 1994). He has been a member of the Indiana Catholic Conference since 1996.
During his deanship, he served as the founding president and vice chancellor of the University of Notre Dame in Perth, Australia (1990-92); he remains a member of that university’s Board of Trustees and Board of Governors. While on leave from Notre Dame Law School in 1999-2001, he served as Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs and founding dean of the law school at the University of St. Thomas in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota, and as Deputy Vice Chancellor and Provost of the University of St. Augustine in South Africa.